SA-CD.net
'meltingly lyrical in the slow movements and full of life in the faster ones.'
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The Independent
Live Review: Corelli at Christmas, Avison Ensemble, Rebecca Bottone, Kings Place, London
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MusicWeb International
Recordings Of The Year 2012: 'The Avisons get the mix for this set of famous concerti absolutely right.'
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Classical CD Review
'Admirers of Baroque music will find much of interest...recorded with warm sound in a resonant acoustic excellent audio with performers in front.'
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The Strad
‘This first album in the Avison Ensemble’s project commemorating the 300th anniversary of Corelli’s death offers well-considered period-instrument accounts that are stylish, imaginative and technically assured.’
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The Avison Ensemble - Corelli: Opus 6 - Gramophone

01 January 2013GramophoneIain Fenlon

The Avison Ensemble play the most famous Op 6 set of all Corelli's reputation as one of the presiding geniuses of the early Baroque is extraordinary for being based on such a small output of work, all of it written for instruments, consisting of just six opus numbers, each of which contains 12 works. Few works of the period can match Corelli's Op 6 Concerti grossi in popularity, something of which the composer was clearly aware: beginning in his twenties, Corelli obsessively worked and reworked them throughout his lifetime, refusing to allow them to be published. It was only one year after his death that they were finally brought out in Amsterdam; subsequently they went through more than 10 editions in some 20 years, not to mention innumerable adaptions and rearrangements in the course of the 18th century. Often styled as the foundation stone of the concerto grosso medium, the pieces of Op 6 are structured around the opposition of solo concertino and larger ripieno groups of instruments, an arrangement that was already established in Rome by the time Corelli arrived there.

The hallmark of Corelli's style in these pieces is seemingly endless invention and variety of expressive means, and this is the main challenge in performance. In terms of recordings there is stiff competition here, with the now quite old if iconic recording of Trevor Pinnock and the English Concert well ahead of the field, but these new performances are certainly part of the competition, supple and elegant, perfectly in harmony with the suave if at times austere character of the music and, above all, architecturally shaped with subtlety and finesse. Improvised ornamention has been added with discretion and care, and the sense of ensemble is faultless and, in the faster movements, breathtakingly impressive.